Russia rejects Western criticism of Baltic missile buildup

The Interfax news agency reported yesterday that the Russian military has put Bastion missile-launchers on duty in the Kaliningrad region, which borders NATO members Poland and Lithuania.

Updated: Tuesday, November 22, 2016, 22:31 [IST]

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Moscow, Nov 22 The Kremlin today brushed off Western criticism of the deployment of state-of-the art missiles in Russia's Baltic Sea region, describing it as an equivalent response to NATO's military buildup near its borders.

The Russian military has reportedly stationed anti-shipping missiles in the nation's westernmost Kaliningrad exclave, and a senior lawmaker also has announced the deployment of other missile systems.

The US State Department and NATO have voiced concern, describing the Russian move as destabilising.

President Vladimir Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, told reporters that the Russian military needs to response to what he described as NATO's aggressive moves.

"The alliance is a truly aggressive bloc, so Russia does what it has to do. It has every sovereign right to take necessary measures throughout the territory of the Russian Federation."

The Interfax news agency reported yesterday that the Russian military has put Bastion missile-launchers on duty in the Kaliningrad region, which borders NATO members Poland and Lithuania.

The Russian Defence Ministry said over the weekend that the Baltic Fleet was rearming itself with new missile-launchers, but didn't provide specifics. It had no immediate comment on the Interfax report.

Separately, Viktor Ozerov, the head of the defence affairs committee in the Russian parliament's upper house, told RIA Novosti news agency yesterday that Russia would also deploy Iskander tactical ballistic missiles and S-400 air defence missile systems to Kaliningrad in response to the US missile defence plans.

US State Department spokesman John Kirby warned yesterday that the deployment of Iskander and S-400 missiles to Kaliningrad is "destabilising to European security" and urged Moscow to "refrain from words or deeds that are inconsistent with the goal of promoting security and stability in the Euro-Atlantic region."

NATO said in a statement to The Associated Press today that the missile deployment near the alliance's borders "does not help to lower tensions or restore predictability to our relations."

NATO called for more transparency on military activities "to avoid incidents and the risk of misunderstandings."

"Russia isn't a source of security threat now. It's the buildup of weapons and servicemen from outside Europe," he said pointing at US missile defence sites in Europe and the planned buildup of US troops in Poland and the Baltics.